| Title | Effects of inhaled human insulin on airway lining fluid composition in adults with diabetes. | | Author(s) | Liu MC, Riese RJ, Van Gundy K, Norwood P, Sullivan BE, Schwartz PF, Teeter JG | | Institution | Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Johns Hopkins Asthma and Allergy Center, Baltimore, MD, USA. | | Source | Eur Respir J 2008 Mar 5. | | Abstract | Inhaled human insulin (Exubera((R)) (human insulin [rDNA origin]) Inhalation Powder) causes small, early and reversible changes in pulmonary function in subjects with diabetes mellitus. These studies assessed whether changes occur in cellular and soluble constituents in airway lining fluid consistent with inflammation as a possible cause for Exubera-associated lung function alterations.Two 31-week, open-label, sequential-design phase 2 studies were conducted, one with 20 subjects with type 1 and one with 24 subjects with type 2 diabetes. After run-in, all subjects received subcutaneous insulin for 12 weeks, followed after 1 week by 12 weeks of Exubera. Bronchoalveolar lavage fluid cell counts and protein constituents were determined at baseline, after 12 weeks of subcutaneous insulin and after 12 weeks of Exubera.Baseline cellular and soluble constituents of lavage fluid were similar to those reported for non-diabetic adults. Exubera produced no consistent clinically or statistically significant changes in total or differential lavage fluid cell counts or protein concentrations, even though Exubera-associated changes in pulmonary function are known to be fully manifest within 12 weeks.Thus, 12 weeks of Exubera are not associated with evidence of pulmonary inflammation. The treatment effects on lung function observed in Exubera trials are not caused by lung inflammation. | | Language | ENG | | Pub Type(s) | JOURNAL ARTICLE
| | PubMed ID | 18321936 |
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